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Georgia beaksedge

Habit Plants perennial, cespitose, to 70–80 cm.
Culms

mostly excurved, slender.

Inflorescences

spikelet clusters mostly loose, branching lax, ascending to arching, ultimate branches with few spikelets; leafy bracts setaceoustipped, these and bractlets exceeding proximal clusters, exceeded by distal.

Spikelets

prevalently lanceoloid, 3–4 mm, apex acute or acuminate;

fertile scales ovate, 2.5–3.5 mm, apex acute, mostly mucronate.

Flowers

perianth bristles 6, short, reaching at most to fruit midbody, antrorsely barbellate.

Fruits

1(–2) per spikelet, 2–2.2 mm;

body brown or redbrown, obovoid, lenticular, 1.5–1.6 mm;

surfaces with numerous, wavy lines of tiny pitlike, short-rectangular, vertical alveolae, separated by numerous, transverse, undulate, low, broad ridges;

tubercle with narrow buttress, lowconic, 3–5 mm.

Rhynchospora harveyi var. culixa

Phenology Fruiting spring–summer.
Habitat Sands and peats of savannas, mostly rises in bogs in pinelands or sandhill bog ecotones
Elevation 0–200 m (0–700 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
FL; GA
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Variety culixa is distinguished from var. harveyi by a lower, more slender habit, by sparser inflorescences, the terminal cluster overtopping subtending leafy bract, and by the comparatively flatter fruit. Its fruit body surfaces have broader, low, smooth, and pale transverse ridges.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 23, p. 232.
Parent taxa Cyperaceae > Rhynchospora > Rhynchospora harveyi
Sibling taxa
R. harveyi var. harveyi
Synonyms R. culixa, R. grayi var. culixa
Name authority (Gale) Kral: Novon 9: 206. (1999)
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